
Kaart van de aanleg van de straatweg van Den Haag naar Scheveningen, 1664-1665 (derde blad)
1667 · engraving on paper
height: 420 cm, width: 511 cm
Rijksmuseum

Frederik de Wit was a Dutch cartographer and publisher active in seventeenth-century Amsterdam, known for hand-colored maps and atlases that established new standards for geographical precision and visual refinement. His workshop produced some of the most sought-after European maps of the period, combining rigorous surveying with decorative cartouches and elaborate title pages. De Wit's cartographic innovations influenced mapmaking practice across Northern Europe and secured Amsterdam's position as a center of geographical knowledge production during the Dutch Golden Age.
Source: Wikidata · Trust score: 40% · Updated 8d ago